“Off the north highway. Late at night.”
Something shifted in my chest.
I wasn’t sure yet.
But I felt it.
“There was a kid,” he continued. “Sitting outside. It was cold. No one around.”
The memory came slowly.
Like something buried under years of routine.
A night drive.
An empty station.
A kid curled up on the curb.
I swallowed.
“…That was you?”
He nodded.
Barely.
“You gave me a sandwich,” he said. “And a ride into town.”
I exhaled.
I remembered.
Not everything.
But enough.
I’d been driving home late after a job. Saw him sitting there. Didn’t look right.
So I stopped.
Bought him a sandwich from a vending machine.
Let him sit in the passenger seat.
Dropped him near a police station.
That was it.
I didn’t ask questions.
Didn’t expect anything.
Just… did what felt right.
And then I forgot.
“I don’t remember your face,” I admitted.
“I remember yours,” he said.
No anger.
No accusation.
Just… truth.
“After that night,” he went on, “things changed.”
The men behind him shifted slightly.
Still silent.
Still watching.
“I got picked up. Placed into the system. Eventually adopted.”
He paused.
“I didn’t sleep outside again.”
My throat tightened.
He turned slightly.
The men behind him stepped forward—just a little.
Not threatening.
Not aggressive.
Just… closer.
And then they stopped.
All at once.
No one spoke.
They just stood there.
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